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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

Apr 24, 2026

Operator

Good afternoon. Welcome to the First Business Financial Services first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to First Business Financial Services, Inc. CEO Corey Chambas. Please go ahead.

Corey Chambas
CEO, First Business Financial Services

Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We appreciate your time and your interest in First Business Bank. Joining me today is our President and Chief Operating Officer, Dave Seiler, and our CFO, Brian Spielmann. Today we'll discuss our financial performance followed by a Q&A session. I'd like to direct you to our first quarter earnings release and supplemental earnings call slides, which are available through our website at ir.firstbusiness.bank. We encourage you to review these along with our other investor materials. Before we begin, please note this call may include forward-looking statements, and the company's actual results may differ materially from those indicated in any forward-looking statements.

Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements are listed in the earnings release and the company's most recent annual report, Form 10-K, and as may be supplemented from time to time in the company's other filings with the SEC, all of which are expressly incorporated herein by reference. There you can also find information related to any non-GAAP financial measures we discuss on today's call, including reconciliations of such measures. We are very pleased with our strong start to 2026. Our team's execution was exceptional. We won new relationships in a highly competitive environment, growing loans and deposits at a pace that well exceeded our expectations. We grew fee income by nearly 16% year-over-year with strong contributions from multiple sources.

I'll highlight our private wealth business, which again produced record revenues and provides annuity-like support for our revenue growth and diversification goals. Asset quality remained stable in our core performing portfolio, and we were pleased to see some swift progress toward resolving our largest non-performing asset, which was downgraded last quarter. At the bottom line, we grew net income and earnings per share by more than 9% over last year's first quarter, even as our margin returned to a more normalized level after being elevated in early 2025, which was residual from the period of rapid Fed tightening. Perhaps most importantly, our strong earnings and disciplined capital deployment drove 14% year-over-year growth and tangible book value per share. This success reflects our commitment to four key objectives.

Prioritizing high quality relationship-based growth, diversifying our revenue streams, maintaining long-term positive operating leverage, and preserving a culture that attracts and keeps the highest quality talent. We are very pleased with the momentum of our first quarter results, which Dave will discuss more now. Dave?

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Thank you, Corey. Our outstanding first quarter growth positions us well to achieve our long-term goals. As you know, we aim for 10% loan and core deposit growth on an annual basis. In the first quarter, we grew loans by $126 million or 15%, far outpacing our plan. Growth came from across our markets led by Madison, Milwaukee, and Kansas City, as well as from asset-based lending, which is generating some great momentum under the new leader we brought on a year ago. The growth occurred late in the quarter with $90 million or 72% in March. That had margin implications, which Brian will cover, and it included some pull forward of growth we had forecasted for the second quarter. After an extremely strong first quarter, our pipelines are lighter going into Q2, and we will have some known payoffs in the second quarter.

Therefore, we expect the second quarter to be lighter on growth than Q1, with normalization in the second half of the year placing us on track to achieve our 10% annual growth goal for 2026. Our 10% growth expectations are driven by continued positive trends in our businesses and the banking industry. Our largest markets in Southern Wisconsin continue to benefit from a strong regional economy. Our clients in the manufacturing and distribution space are doing well. Commercial real estate occupancies have remained strong, particularly in multifamily properties. We are also seeing signs that new development is picking up after a slight slowdown in 2024 and 2025. Additionally, we continue to expect the 2026 changes to federal tax policy should be a tailwind for our business clients and C&I portfolio. We continue to see tangible benefits from talent acquisitions as well.

We recently hired a new president for our private wealth business. We are also seeing positive results from producers in asset-based lending who were hired in the second half of 2025. Obviously, we are looking at the same wild cards as everyone else and will continue to monitor for any impact of oil prices and geopolitical uncertainty. So far, it's been business as usual. I also want to highlight our exceptional double-digit growth in core deposits this quarter. First quarter balances were up 18% from the linked quarter and up 14% year-over-year. That's not an easy feat in this environment. Our focus on hiring the best treasury management talent and maintaining a disciplined approach to business development continues to pay off. We are pleased to see this core deposit growth coming from multiple bank markets and our private wealth group.

Our strength is in taking market share as you saw this quarter, so we are confident in our team's ability to not only maintain existing client relationships, but also to continue bringing in new deposit balances. As with loans, we continue to target 10% growth on an annual basis. Another highlight was our strong non-interest income, which grew 16% compared to last year's first quarter. Private wealth produced record revenue of $3.9 million, up 11% year-over-year. This business consistently generates more than 40% of our total quarterly fee income. Strong deposit growth contributed to service charges increasing more than 26% year-over-year, displaying our team's impressive success in adding and expanding First Business banking relationships. Our other fee income sources, which tend to be variable from quarter to quarter, posted favorable results for the quarter. Moving to credit.

We saw some rapid progress on our largest non-performing asset. Recall that we downgraded $20.4 million in CRE loans from a single Southeast Wisconsin-based client relationship to non-accrual status last quarter. In Q1, $3.4 million of land development loans in this portfolio were sold at par. You can see the benefit of this to our non-performing asset ratio on slide 12 of the earnings supplement. Appraisals exceed carrying values on the land in the remaining $17 million of loans, with no specific reserves recorded. We expect ongoing resolution, though the timing will be variable. Based on current activity, we don't anticipate additional progress to occur before the second half of 2026. The remainder of our portfolio is stable, and you can see our favorable trends on slide 11. Before I hand it off to Brian, I'll note that this is Corey's last call before his retirement next week.

I want to thank Corey for his leadership and service to First Business Bank. It's difficult to summarize his many contributions to our company, so I'll leave you with this. During Corey's tenure as CEO, First Business Bank has produced cumulative shareholder returns of nearly 700%, outperforming bank and regional bank indices by a multiple of more than 3x, and the Russell 2000 by more than 200 percentage points. This is no coincidence. Corey's a visionary, and we are grateful for his leadership and friendship. We are also very happy that Corey will be continuing to serve on our board. Now I'll hand it off to Brian.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Well said, Dave. Thanks. First quarter net interest margin increased 3 basis points to 356, and there was some noise in both the first and linked quarters. You can see a breakdown of this on slide six of our earnings supplement. First quarter NIM included the 5 basis point impact of fewer accrual days in the quarter. Excluding this impact, first quarter NIM was 361, which would be in line with our internal budget expectations. As a reminder, fourth quarter NIM included 10 basis points of compression from the non-accrual interest reversal on the downgraded CRE NPL. Excluding this, fourth quarter NIM would have measured 363. There was no non-accrual interest reversal activity in Q1. The 2 basis point difference in these adjusted NIM measurements primarily reflects the late quarter timing of loan growth. As Dave mentioned, the bulk of our significant loan growth came late in the quarter.

Two-thirds of the growth was from our C&I portfolios, which are higher yielding than CRE, and we expect this to benefit our net interest margin going forward. You can see the historical trend of this yield differential on slide five of the earnings supplement. Looking out at the year, we think the early momentum of C&I loan growth in Q1 positions us well to operate within or toward the lower to middle portion of our target of 360-365 range for the year. Our outlook assumes a stable to modestly changing interest rate environment. Margin performance is expected to be driven primarily by balance sheet mix and our targeted annual 10% loan and core deposit growth rather than additional rate tailwinds. On the funding side, ongoing core deposit growth has improved our funding mix over time, and we continue to manage deposit pricing with discipline in a competitive environment.

Where needed, we supplement with wholesale funding to match fund fixed-rate loans and maintain NIM stability. On non-interest income and expense, I'll remind you that quarterly comparisons are impacted by last quarter's accounting classification change related to limited partnership investments. Specifically, last quarter, we reclassified $904,000 out of our other non-interest expense and into other non-interest income to net against the related revenue. This expense represented the bank's share of costs for the first nine months of 2025 related to our latest round of limited partnership investments. Our strong first quarter fee income supports our expectation of 10% growth for the full year compared to 2025, and we view first quarter as a good starting point for quarterly fee income in 2026. Looking at expenses, we saw typical first-quarter increases related to compensation.

Compensation expense increased by about $1.4 million from Q4, mainly due to first-quarter resets for payroll taxes and 401(k) match contributions, along with annual merit increases and higher average FTEs, which were up about 5.7% from a year ago. Looking ahead, payroll taxes will come down throughout the year, but new FTE adds will go up. Professional fees were also higher in Q1, increasing by about $445,000 from Q4. Elevated recruiting costs and seasonal legal fees related to the company's annual 10-K and proxy filings drove the increase.

We typically base our full year expense forecast on first quarter actuals, which remain an appropriate run rate for 2026. I'll reiterate that our primary expense management objective is achieving annual positive operating leverage. That is annual expense growth at some level modestly below our targeted level of 10% annual revenue growth. The effective tax rate was 15.2% for the first quarter. Our effective tax rate varies modestly quarter to quarter, in part due to the timing of tax benefits received from our investment in limited partnerships and the timing of stock compensation vesting activity. We continue to expect our effective tax rate will be within our expected annual range of 16%-18% for 2026. Finally, our strong earnings have continued to generate excess capital to facilitate organic growth. We continue to believe reinvestment in the growth of the company provides the best return for our shareholders.

We do, of course, evaluate all capital management tools at our disposal to maximize shareholder returns. Now I'll hand it back over to Corey.

Corey Chambas
CEO, First Business Financial Services

Thank you, Brian and Dave. Dave was the architect of our current five-year strategic plan, and you can see our outstanding progress toward achieving the goals of this plan on slide 15. I believe nothing has been more instrumental to achieving this success than our culture. I'll take a final opportunity to bang the drum on this. Our culture defines us and is our secret sauce. It is in the DNA of First Business Bank to be passionate about our people and obsessed with our strategic plan. It's foundational to our mission to be an entrepreneurial partner to our clients, investors, and communities. This intense cultural focus has been fundamental in achieving our superior long-term shareholder returns. It has been my North Star of sorts, and I'm confident Dave's leadership will bring continued success.

We have the right team in place to continue achieving both strong earnings and above-industry growth, and I'm excited for the future of First Business Bank. Thank you for taking time to join us today. We're happy to take your questions now.

Operator

Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. If you have dialed in and would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and join the queue. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. If you are called upon to ask a question and are listening via loudspeaker, please pick up your handset and ensure that your phone is not on mute when asking your question. Your first question comes from the line of Daniel Tamayo of Raymond James. Your line is open.

Daniel Tamayo
VP, Raymond James

Thank you. Good afternoon, everybody. First, just wanted to say congratulations on your retirement, Corey. It's been a pleasure working with you over the last few years.

Corey Chambas
CEO, First Business Financial Services

Great.

Daniel Tamayo
VP, Raymond James

Obviously good luck to Dave. I guess on the heels of that, I'll throw out a longer-term question here for you, Dave, as you look to the future. Looking at slide 15 with your goals and progress on it and the 2024-2028 goals. From a profitability perspective, you guys obviously have talked about this 10% growth, and I think that certainly holds, but just curious how you think about from a profitability perspective, I guess if it's efficiency or return on tangible common equity. Do you anticipate changing any of these long-term goals and progress, the slide or anything like that as you think about your leadership? If not, what's the plan over the next few years to get or keep these numbers kind of at these levels?

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah, good question. Our strategic plan is a five-year strategic plan. We're a little over two years into it. Every quarter or more often, we look at all of these metrics and evaluate if they're still the right metrics for us to be looking at. I would say right now, you look at our efficiency ratio, for example, that blipped up a little bit this quarter for reasons that I think we've outlined in some of our comments already. We expect that to kind of return to where we want it to be over the balance of the year and in the upcoming quarters. At this point, we still think these are good metrics for us to be working on. We've identified five strategies from our strategic plan, and we have teams of leaders working on each of the strategies.

At this point, I think we think these are the right targets for us.

Daniel Tamayo
VP, Raymond James

All right. Good start, Dave.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

I'm not official yet, Daniel.

Daniel Tamayo
VP, Raymond James

All right. Fair enough. Then I think I get what you guys are saying on the margin. I'm assuming this is going to be an annual thing. It's just the math of the fewer days in the first quarter. As we think about modeling the margin, we should think about modeling that down a bit in the first quarter going forward and then popping back up in the second quarter remaining in the targeted range. Brian?

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah. That's a fair statement. I would say we're always going to have the first quarter accrual mechanics issue.

For us specifically for this quarter, to me, it was more of a timing difference on when our funding came in versus when we deployed that funding in the quarter. That to me is more of the driver on why the NIM was reported outside of our range. If we would've had the loan growth align with that funding growth earlier in the quarter, the NIM would've been within our range. That's more of it, but I think your point is valid though, in terms of the first quarter estimates that there's going to be that day basis impact.

Daniel Tamayo
VP, Raymond James

Okay. As it relates to that dynamic with the late in the quarter loan growth, like you're thinking basically the margin comes back up into the range in the second quarter and then relatively stable from there.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Yes.

Daniel Tamayo
VP, Raymond James

Okay. All right. I will step back. Thanks, guys. Appreciate it.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks, Daniel.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Rulis of D.A. Davidson. Your line is open.

Jeff Rulis
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Thanks. Good afternoon. I wanted to check on the expenses. Brian, got your comments there. It just seemed a little high. Maybe I'm just still updating the model on the reclass a little bit. If I heard that right, that this level, you kind of flatline for the year. I guess if I just annualize it and then run it out across full year 2025, something in the high single digits. Is that kind of where we should be thinking?

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Exactly. Yep. Spot on.

Jeff Rulis
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay. While I got you, Brian, do you have the margin for the month of March just to try to get a jumping-off point?

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

We don't have that. It would be influenced by the loan growth. That's kind of the point behind the loan growth commentary is that the reported Q1 margin of 3.59% being impacted, sorry, by 3.56% being impacted by that. It's going to be pushing us back into our range based on that March activity.

Jeff Rulis
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay. Fair enough. You were pretty clear about the resuming back into that range, so I'll stick with that. Just was curious. Maybe just a last one on the growth. Dave, I think you alluded to the geography, but do you have a breakout of maybe the mix of that growth pretty strong, but was it the mix of existing customers versus new? I think you mentioned maybe that was a 60-40 split last quarter or something. Just trying to get a sense for market share gains or existing customers.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah. Well, we don't have a mix between existing clients and new clients. I think as we stated before, it was really across all of our Southern Wisconsin bank markets and Kansas City, as well as asset-based lending. I would say within those groups, it really wasn't concentrated in any particular area. It was spread fairly evenly.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

I would say always our growth is going to be driven by new. We do more loans to existing clients over time. The driver of our growth is always going to be new client relationships.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Well, I think one of the things you can look at that reinforces that is the growth in our service fee income. That we've had very rapid growth in our service fee income, and you don't get that without adding new clients.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Service charges?

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah, service charge.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah.

Jeff Rulis
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay. Thanks for the color. Corey, thanks for the conversations over the years. All the best. I appreciate what you've done. Dave, I look forward to catching up in Nashville in a couple of weeks. Thanks.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks, Jeff.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks, Jeff.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Nathan Race of Piper Sandler. Your line is open.

Nathan Race
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Hey, guys. Good afternoon.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Hey, Nathan.

Nathan Race
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Thanks for the comments earlier. Congratulations, Corey and Dave. It's been great working with you.

Corey Chambas
CEO, First Business Financial Services

Thank you.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks.

Nathan Race
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Wanted to check in on just the fee income outlook. Brian, I think you mentioned kind of a stable outlook. Just curious kind of what momentum you're seeing on the SBA front. Obviously, wealth management's showing some nice growth year-over-year as well. Just curious how you're thinking about kind of the overall year-over-year trajectory.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

I can speak to the total broader fee income piece, and then maybe Dave has a couple comments on SBA. The total fee income line, I think is consistent with the prior messaging around 10% year-over-year growth expectations with Q1 being a good starting point for that. I know we had some noise in Q4. Really strong performance from those more consistent annuity streams for us, private wealth, service charges, and other, which now includes starting to build more of our SBIC investment product there that'll start kicking off more returns as well over time. That's really the primary drivers of that fee income, which again, we believe is a 10% growth, in total for us throughout 2026. Dave.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah, on the SBA side, we actually expected that to be a little bit higher this quarter after the shutdown late last year. I think as we look at pipelines, we expect it to be relatively flat going forward.

Nathan Race
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. Got it. Dave, I think you mentioned earlier you're expecting some softer growth in the same quarter, just given maybe some pull-through and some expected payoffs this quarter. Is it fair to expect maybe like mid to low single-digit growth in the same quarter and then getting back up to that kind of high single digit to low double-digit trajectory in the back half of the year?

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah, I think that's probably reasonable for Q2, Nate. A little bit depends on payoffs, and some of those are in flux right now, so we can't predict them 100%, but I think that's a reasonable point, and we still expect to be at 10% for the year.

Nathan Race
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. Maybe one last one. Any color that you could shed on the charge-offs in the quarter and just how you're budgeting or thinking about charge-offs over the balance of this year? It doesn't sound like there's been much movement on that ABL credit that we've talked about, which, again, shouldn't really result in any lost content. Within that context, it also seems like the Southeast properties are still slated to sell at par, similar to what we saw this quarter. We're just hoping to get any color along those lines, please.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

I can talk about the Southeast properties and the asset-based lending credit that we have. On the Southeast properties last quarter, we talked about how we're going to work out of this over time. We started that with a little over $3 million in payoffs with no losses in the past quarter. Right now, we are pursuing foreclosure on the rest of the properties in that non-performing portfolio. We shouldn't really expect any resolution in Q2. That's probably more the back half of the year based on how long those proceedings take in Wisconsin. Again, as it relates to the asset-based lending credit, that's going to be an end of the year type event most likely. We've had no negative news there. It's just moving through the court system very slowly. We're being told that's what we should expect in this case.

Nathan Race
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. That's helpful. I appreciate the color.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Nate, on the broader charge-off question, I would say for Q1, nothing kind of unusual to report. Kind of a broad mix of charge-offs coming from SBA, C&I. I will say that EF Equipment Finance improved from a charge-off perspective from Q4 to Q1. That's a good indication that we're improving and working through that portfolio. I think we had about 25 basis points of charge-offs in the quarter. A little higher than we would think. We tend to think around 20 basis points on average for the year. Nothing that's alarming to us by any means.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Just to add to that, Nate, that transportation segment of that Equipment Finance portfolio, which started out at about $61 million, is down to $18.1 million or $18.2 million, something like that. We're making nice progress on that.

Nathan Race
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Okay. Gotcha. Very helpful. I appreciate all the color. Thanks, guys. Hope you have a great weekend.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks. Yeah, you too.

Operator

Again, if you have a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from the line of Damon DelMonte of KBW. Your line is open.

Damon DelMonte
Managing Director, KBW

Hey, good afternoon, guys. First off, Corey, congratulations on the retirement. I think I've been covering you guys for probably close to 12 years, so it's been an enjoyable run. Dave, look forward to working with you in your new role. Congrats.

Corey Chambas
CEO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks.

Damon DelMonte
Managing Director, KBW

With that.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks, Damon.

Damon DelMonte
Managing Director, KBW

Sure. With that, I guess most of my questions have been asked and answered. Brian, I may have missed this, but do you know what the fees in lieu of interest were included in the margin this quarter?

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

We're about $2.2 million. That's more in line with kind of a run rate, a little bit higher than the run rates. That's up from the prior uarter. Remember, the prior quarter had the non-accrual interest reversal in Q4, so.

Damon DelMonte
Managing Director, KBW

Right. That's right. Okay. Thanks. Kind of along the lines of credit and trying to figure out provisioning going forward, the reserve, do you expect to kind of maintain this reserve level? If you kind of have average net charge-offs of 20 basis points, kind of just back into the provision that way? Is that a good way to think about it?

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Yeah, that's how I think about it, Damon. I think the macro piece of this equation, we subscribe to Moody's, right? That's the wild card with the geopolitical, but I think all else equal, you're provisioning for growth off this reserve level with the 20 basis points, if that's appropriate. We saw, for example, this quarter, $1 million of that provision was due to loan growth, so that 2.9% in the quarter. That'll come back down. Obviously, we talked about with Q2 growth coming back down. Yeah, with the uncertainty around the macro, to me that's no change is a reasonable place to be.

Damon DelMonte
Managing Director, KBW

Got it. Okay.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

On reserve.

Damon DelMonte
Managing Director, KBW

Great. That pretty much covered everything else. Thanks for taking my questions, and take care.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

All right. Thanks, Damon.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Brian Martin of Janney. Your line is open.

Brian Martin
Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott

Hey, good afternoon, guys.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Good afternoon.

Brian Martin
Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott

Say, just maybe one for me on the loan growth front. Can you talk a little bit about just the growth this year? Just kind of big picture, kind of where you're optimistic. I know this quarter you talked about having really strong growth on the specialty side, but just wondering where you're seeing the growth by components, or just kind of where you're most optimistic going into the year and maybe areas that aren't really as optimistic about in terms of delivering the targeted growth this year.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Sure. Well, I think if you look for where it's going to come from for the rest of the year.

Brian Martin
Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott

Yeah

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

I think we're going to continue to see nice growth from our ABL team, also from our accounts receivable finance team. Kansas City is looking really good, and we continue to add talent in Kansas City. Particularly our southern Wisconsin markets are still strong. We have good teams in both of those markets, so we should continue to see growth there.

Brian Martin
Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott

Okay. In terms of the build-out, it sounds like you're still adding some folks in Kansas City. Is that primarily complete at this point? You've got a full team or are there just more areas you're adding down there?

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

I don't think we'll have a lot more adds down there, Brian, but we could have another add. In order for us to continue to grow at 10%, we have to continue to add folks really across our markets. I think we will likely have another add in Kansas City this year.

Brian Martin
Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott

Got you. Okay. Maybe just jumping to the fee income perspective. I appreciate the color you guys have already given in your comments, right? Just in terms of the lumpiness that kind of seems within this portfolio, do you still expect some lumpiness kind of throughout the year? I know the non-major reclass and stuff, just kind of trying to think about the quarterly movement or progression. Do you expect a little bit more consistency? Is it still going to be a little bit lumpy as we go along?

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

I would say yes is the answer. There's still going to be lumpiness, but that's something we're working on and trying to improve, right? We talked about the success of our private wealth and our service charges. Those are becoming more and more consistent in an annuity-like, more so than they had before. I also just really kind of briefly talked about our investments in Small Business Investment Company funds. We're deploying more capital there. There's a 5% limit for regulatory capital, but we're doing that over time to add a more stable level of fee income too, to the quarterly run rate. That'll take some time, but that's another part of our process to smooth those earnings out on a quarterly basis. It's just the nature of swap fees and SBA gains.

It's just going to be lumpy still, but that's why we're really focused on that 10% year-over-year growth.

Brian Martin
Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott

Yeah. Okay. That covers. Damon got the credit part. Other than that, I'm good. Just the same comment that both guys have made. Corey, it's been great working with you over the years, Corey, and I wish you the best in retirement. Dave, it's been good getting to know you and continue to work going forward. Congrats on everything, and thanks for taking the questions.

Dave Seiler
President and COO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks, Brian.

Brian Spielmann
CFO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks Brian.

Operator

That concludes our Q&A session. I'll now turn the conference over back to CEO Corey Chambas for closing remarks.

Corey Chambas
CEO, First Business Financial Services

Thanks. First, I'd just like to say I appreciate all the relationships I've built with all of you over the years. I will definitely miss that and miss you all. Overall, I just want to say thanks everybody for your interest in First Business Bank, joining us today, and hope everybody has a great weekend.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.

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